Abstract

The neural basis of selective attention within hierarchically organized Navon figures has been extensively studied with event related potentials (ERPs), by contrasting responses obtained when attending the global and the local echelons. The findings are inherently ambiguous because both levels are always presented together. Thus, only a mixture of the brain responses to two levels can be observed. Here, we use a method that allows unveiling of global and local letters at distinct times, enabling estimation of separate ERPs related to each level. Two interspersed oddball streams were presented, each using letters from one level and comprised of frequent distracters and rare targets. Previous work and our Experiment 1 show that it is difficult to divide attention between two such streams of stimuli. ERP recording in Experiment 2 evinced an early selection negativity (SN, with latencies to the 50% area of about 266 ms for global distracters and 276 ms for local distracters) that was larger for attended relative to unattended distracters. The SN was larger over right posterior occipito-temporal derivations for global stimuli and over left posterior occipito-temporal derivations for local stimuli (although the latter was less strongly lateralized). A discrimination negativity (DN, accompanied by a P3b) was larger for attended targets relative to attended distracters, with latencies to the 50% area of about 316 ms for global stimuli and 301 ms for local stimuli, which presented a similar distribution for both levels over left temporo-parietal electrodes. The two negativities apparently index successive stages in the processing of a selected level within a compound figure. By resolving the ambiguity of traditional designs, our method allowed us to observe the effects of attention for each hierarchical level on its own.

Highlights

  • Visual scenes can be perceived at different hierarchical levels, which go from the most global tier down to the finest details

  • The goal of this article was to compare the event related potentials (ERPs) elicited by letters obtained when attention was focused on their channel of presentation with the ERPs obtained when attention was diverted to the other channel

  • We found that the frequent distracter letters at the global level exhibited a posterior selection negativity (SN) when they were the focus of attention relative to when attention was diverted to the local level

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Summary

Introduction

Visual scenes can be perceived at different hierarchical levels, which go from the most global tier down to the finest details (e.g., crowd-person-face-eyes-eyelashes). Similar issues have been previously addressed with visual event related potentials (ERPs) for spatial-based (Anllo-Vento and Hillyard, 1996; Clark and Hillyard, 1996; Hillyard and AnlloVento, 1998), feature-based (Hopf et al, 2004; Nobre et al, 2006; Andersen et al, 2008), and object-based attention (ValdesSosa et al, 1998; Martinez et al, 2007), using elegant methods painstakingly developed over decades (Hillyard et al, 1973; Hillyard and Picton, 1979; Kappenman and Luck, 2012) Some of these techniques have been applied to study global/local processing, but several obstacles preclude application of the more powerful methods including what is known as the Hillyard sustained attention paradigm (Luck and Kappenman, 2012). We later analyze the obstacles mentioned above and propose a line of attack to overcome these limitations

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